The flagship. A jetter nozzle works down the line under up to 4,000 PSI of water, scouring grease, scale, sludge, and roots off the full pipe wall — not punching a hole through the middle of the problem. The debris flushes downstream and the camera pass afterward shows bare, clean pipe.
Typical 2026 range: $350–$800 residential; commercial grease lines and heavy root work run higher.
The right call for standard, first-time clogs: cable machines with the right cutting heads clear kitchen sinks, tubs, laundry lines, and toilets fast — most in under an hour.
Typical 2026 range: $150–$350 per drain, depending on access and severity.
Tree roots find every joint and crack in an older sewer line, and they always come back to the same spots. Root-cutting jetter heads and cable blades clear the line; the camera then shows whether the entry points call for lining, a spot repair, or a maintenance schedule.
Typical 2026 range: $400–$900 for clearing; lining and repairs quoted from camera findings.
A self-leveling camera travels the line while a locator maps its position and depth from the surface. You see what's actually in there — roots, bellies, breaks, grease — recorded and explained, before anyone quotes a fix.
Typical 2026 range: $150–$400, often credited toward work performed.
Tell us what the drain is doing — our licensed service provider responds fast, same-day for active backups.